Trish's Reviews > Autumn

Autumn by Ali Smith
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It is November and outside my front door roses are still blooming. Their color is a deep rich clear pink. They look better than they did in the dry heat of summer.

Smith’s first novel in her proposed quartet of volumes is an utter delight. I’d never encountered her voice before but when I got to the end, I looked again at the beginning. Just as well, because I had forgotten that Daniel speaks, briefly, before the story gets picked up by “his granddaughter,” Elisabeth, with an “s.”

What I find queer, now having finished the novel, is why people talk about this as a Brexit novel. It is a novel of our times, told by a smart and savvy observer, but I would have put the emphasis squarely on the exploitation and disregard of women, their work, their point of view. Especially at this moment of lurid sexual scandal with roots supposedly in the 1960’s, “when the ethos was different,” we hear a voice that pierces that veil of ignorance and disregard and looks squarely at the mystery of history. Smith has caught our moment perfectly.

The real beauty of this novel is the heart of the novelist. She sees the hard truths we negotiate every day and does not deny them but looks instead at our vulnerabilities, and how we need one another to perfect our world. The work is something reminiscent of pop art, jazzy and clever but with echoes…instead of a piece of pink lace stuck variously under paint on the canvas, a memory…of children washing up on a beach, or women being pushed and herded onto buses…so slight a mention they are mere shadows.

But then Daniel asks explicitly, the first time they play Bagatelle, “Sure you want war?” before patiently instructing Elisabeth in the importance of diversity of thought: how the idea of ‘threatening’ is not unidirectional and can all be in one’s own mind. Daniel becomes companion, teacher, friend to adolescent Elisabeth, dismissed by Elisabeth’s mother as ‘that old queen.’

What to make of Elisabeth’s mother? (view spoiler)

Smith marks time in this novel by describing the physical environment, the state of the roses, the chill in the air, the gossamer filaments of spider webs bearing beads, the color and position of leaves (on the trees, fallen to the ground). It positions us in a shifting timescape, through Daniel’s lifetime, and encapsulating the art of the first (and only?) female pop artist in Britain. Pauline Boty was…dismissed is too intentional a word…ignored during her career as an artist because she was beautiful and female. It makes one want to pair those two descriptors forever, in solidarity.
“And whoever makes up the story makes up the world…So always try to welcome people into the home of your story…”
I felt welcomed into the kindnesses Smith creates in this novel. There is wickedness in the world, and tragedy, but it doesn’t have to define us. We can create a world that turns inexorably, like the seasons, to longer days and more clement weather. And we can find people to love in the most unlikely places. Love is the [only?] thing that makes life worthwhile.

This novel was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize in 2017.
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Reading Progress

October 29, 2017 – Started Reading
October 29, 2017 – Shelved
October 29, 2017 –
page 138
52.47% "Had never read a novel by Ali Smith. I love her humor and heart. She gives us a brilliant "old gay man," Daniel Gluck, and Elisabeth with an "s.""
November 3, 2017 – Shelved as: art
November 3, 2017 – Shelved as: europe
November 3, 2017 – Shelved as: family
November 3, 2017 – Shelved as: fiction
November 3, 2017 – Shelved as: favorite
November 3, 2017 – Shelved as: immigration
November 3, 2017 – Shelved as: history
November 3, 2017 – Shelved as: government
November 3, 2017 – Shelved as: british
November 3, 2017 – Shelved as: literature
November 3, 2017 – Shelved as: politics
November 3, 2017 – Shelved as: philosophy
November 3, 2017 – Shelved as: sexuality
November 3, 2017 – Shelved as: totally-unexpected
November 3, 2017 – Shelved as: series
November 3, 2017 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-23 of 23 (23 new)

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message 1: by Kolumbina (new) - added it

Kolumbina Cannot wait for your review!
Kolumbina


H (is anyone getting notifications) Balikov "The real beauty of this novel is the heart of the novelist. She sees the hard truths we negotiate every day and does not deny them but looks instead at our vulnerabilities, and how we need one another to perfect our world."

Impressive, Trish!


Trish Really loved what Smith did with this novel. Her writing is so 'now' and yet so carefully crafted. She is a powerhouse. I am sad I missed her work until now.


H (is anyone getting notifications) Balikov Trish wrote: "Really loved what Smith did with this novel. Her writing is so 'now' and yet so carefully crafted. She is a powerhouse. I am sad I missed her work until now."

It's great to find a special author. Now you can look forward to not running out of her books for the foreseeable future.


Trish HBalikov wrote: "It's great to find a sp..."

Her book Winter just came out yesterday in Britain. :)


Krista Yes, yes, yes. I'm not unhappy about Saunders winning the Man Booker this year, but Autumn was my own pick. I've tried Ali Smith before and she's always gone over my head - this one was right in my wheelhouse. Thanks for expressing some of what I loved about this. =)


Trish You caught it--her intelligence is incisive. I am now interested to go back through her oeuvre. I'm glad I picked the one that was clearest, first. She is in her fifties, and therefore (I reckon) has plenty of time (?) to write more important novels.

The review for Winter in The Guardian says much of what I said about her work in Autumn: she is kind, generous, etc... Looks like Winter is available to Canadians via NetGalley. Look forward to seeing what you think.


Krista And I, you. ;)


Ilse A heart-warming rendering of Smith's novel, Trish - I couldn't agree more with what you write in your last paragraph, let love rule and wash away defeatism.


Elizabeth A Excellent review Trish.


Trish Thanks, Ilse & Elizabeth. I enjoyed this one.


message 12: by BlackOxford (new)

BlackOxford Isn’t it wonderful how the roses of November last so much longer? Thoughts of an old guy.


Suzanne Lovely review, Trish. I think you're going to love the rest of Ali Smith's books. She is amazing.


Trish BlackOxford wrote: "Isn’t it wonderful how the roses of November last so much longer? Thoughts of an old guy."

Yes, it is difficult to be sorry that they are so happy in the longer season.


Trish Suzanne wrote: "Lovely review, Trish. I think you're going to love the rest of Ali Smith's books. She is amazing."

Can't wait.


Caterina Lovely gentle review, Trish. This one is on my list and in fact is sitting in my living room, waiting to be started ...


Trish Caterina wrote: "Lovely gentle review, Trish. This one is on my list and in fact is sitting in my living room, waiting to be started ..."

Oh. joy...To have such a book waiting unread. It is complex enough to keep one's mind engaged, beautiful in its descriptions of nature, righteous enough to twang our heartstrings and bolster our souls.


Caterina Trish wrote: "Oh. joy...To have such a book waiting unread. It is complex enough to keep one's mind engaged, beautiful in its descriptions of nature, righteous enough to twang our heartstrings and bolster our souls. "

That's quite a poetic invitation! I accept! :)


Karen· Lovely.
I too have this one waiting for me. Time to get to it before the flowers in our garden are touched by the first frost.


message 20: by Julie (new) - added it

Julie Ali Smith is like a bad penny for me, ... I keep avoiding and avoiding, and still she turns up at my door, with great reviews like yours, Trish, which makes me feel I shouldn't close the door again next time she turns up. Excellent review.


Trish Julie wrote: "Ali Smith is like a bad penny for me, ... I keep avoiding and avoiding, and still she turns up at my door, with great reviews like yours, Trish, which makes me feel I shouldn't close the door again..."

Julie, did you have a bad experience reading her at one time? If so, another GRer said this is not like her earlier work--it is more accessible. Iloved her character Daniel. Whenever he was being showcased, I was rapt.


message 22: by Julie (new) - added it

Julie Accidentally-speaking, Trish. : ) Found that book to be unreadable, to put it kindly, and so never understood what all the fuss was about, thereafter. And yet, I've read such great reviews here on GR of many of her other works that I have even gone so far as to put her on my TBR list. (But there she sits, unsought.) It's the wonderful reviews, like yours, that beckon with that come-hither-and-read-me look that gets me every time. Then I find myself sinking. I may try again with this one. I am taken in, this time, by your statement: The real beauty of this novel is the heart of the novelist. Wonderful when that happens.


Seana Thanks for this. I just read it, having found it at the AirBnB we were staying at in Scotland. The Brexit part was way over my head. The thing that was important to me in the book was the friendship between Elizabeth and Daniel, because it seemed like a unique and important thing that no one else seemed to come close to understanding.


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